Habitual Responses to Time with ADHD

EPISODE · Jun 6, 2022 · 23 MIN

Habitual Responses to Time with ADHD

from Translating ADHD · host Shelly Collins and Cameron Gott

Last week Cam and Shelly talked about habitual emotional responses to the stories we tell ourselves. This week they explore habitual responses in the context of time. Those of us with ADHD can have a complicated relationship with time. We can be extremely reactive to it, and we can be highly avoidant of it. Today the hosts share client examples of some classic habitual responses to time. Shelly and Cam reference the Eisenhower Decision Matrix tool that distinguishes importance and urgency in a task, especially Quadrant I items that are important and urgent and the ever-challenging Quadrant II items that are important and not urgent. With ADHD just ‘scheduling’ our important items in the future is not enough. We have to first address the propensity to be drawn to the biggest signals - lit up by urgency and our level of interest. Shelly leads off with her own client example where her client struggled with scheduling the all-important case notes in her role as a special education teacher. As Shelly and her client start to look for the “big chunks” of time the client starts to shift her perspective, not only seeing the time but how the time would be valuable to address much more relevant tasks. In doing so, Shelly’s client noticed and shifted away from her habit of thinking she needed big chunks to finish her notes. Cam follows with an example where the client’s habitual response is to avoid undefined but less urgent tasks, pushing them to the next day on his calendar. These self-described “black boxes” were a source of underlying anxiety for Cam’s client. But when the client let go of not knowing and embracing a narrow role of just assessing and defining the task, he could overcome his avoidant behavior. In both examples, the clients got curious and present to the opportunity at hand. Cam and Shelly leave listeners with some simple practices to start identifying and shifting habitual responses to time. Episode links + resources: Join the Community | Become a Patron Our Process: Understand, Own, Translate. About Cam and Shelly For more of the Translating ADHD podcast: Episode Transcripts: visit TranslatingADHD.com and click on the episode Follow us on Twitter: @TranslatingADHD Visit the Website: TranslatingADHD.com

NOW PLAYING

Habitual Responses to Time with ADHD

0:00 23:22

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

ADHD Aha! Understood.org, Laura Key Listen to people share candid stories about the moment it clicked that they have ADHD. Host Laura Key, who’s had her own ADHD “aha” moment, chats with guests about common topics like ADHD and shame, mental health challenges, and more. Through heartfelt interviews, listeners learn about the unexpected, emotional, and even funny ways ADHD symptoms surface for kids and adults. THE HABITS & HOME SHOW | Decluttering & Systems for Christian ADHD Moms Lisa Lizotte | Home Organizer and Habits Coach If you’re an ADHD mom trying to show the love of Jesus to your family but the clutter in your home keeps you overwhelmed and frustrated, you have come to the right place!On this podcast, you will hear easy step-by-step tips to declutter and create systems so you can keep your home organized and finally walk in the peace God has promised you. Need some accountability? I’ve got you covered there too. Join The Accountability Club a community of like-minded mamas decluttering and systemizing our homes together! Are you ready friend? Let’s get started!FREE DOWNLOAD:Daily Reset Checklisthttp://habitsandhome.comPrivate Coachinghttps://habitsandhome.com/consultationJOIN THE ACCOUNTABILITY CLUB:https://habitsandhome.com/club Utforsk Mottaket Media Utforsk fra Aschehoug er for alle som er engasjert i skole.  Er alle med ADHD utagerende? Hvordan skal vi undervise om kjønn? Andreas Stien-Leenderts er en engasjert lærer som inviterer eksperter til å utforske temaer knyttet til skolen. Han er nysgjerrig og søker tips, diskusjon, perspektiv og idéer på det som opptar lærere, foresatte, skoleledere og elever.  Vi håper hver episode gjør deg litt klokere. ADHD Money Talk David DeWitt, CFP® When your brain and your bank account are constantly fighting, it's time for a new approach.ADHD Money Talk is the podcast that finally addresses what traditional financial advice misses: how ADHD fundamentally changes your relationship with money. From impulse spending and financial avoidance to the shame spiral that keeps you stuck, we tackle the real challenges that come with managing money when your brain works differently.
URL copied to clipboard!